Woman pleads guilty to participating in interstate sex trafficking

A Topeka woman pleaded guilty Tuesday to taking part in an interstate sex trafficking business, acting U.S. Attorney Tom Beall said.

Rachel Flenniken, 34, Topeka, Kan., pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy and two counts of using an interstate facility in furtherance of prostitution. In her plea, she admitted working for a male co-defendant who was running a prostitution business in Topeka. At times, as many as 20 females were working as prostitutes in the organization. Flenniken’s employer rented houses where some of the prostitutes who might work at Nu Bay were allowed to live. He used Web sites, social media and cell phones to advertise sexual services and to keep track of the prostitutes.

Flenniken admitted she began working for the male co-defendant as a prostitute in 2008. By 2010, he put her in charge of other prostitutes. She was responsible for keeping track of their meetings with clients and collecting the money they received. She arranged interstate travel for the purpose of prostitution, posted on-line advertisements for workers, and maintained communication with prostitutes while they were working.

Sentencing is set for Oct. 17. She faces a penalty of up to five years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000 on each count.

Co-defendant Frank Boswell, 42, Topeka, Kan., is awaiting trial.

Beall commended the Topeka Police Department, Homeland Security Investigations, the FBI and Assistant U.S. Attorney Christine Kenney for their work on the case.

KCK student receives doctorate from Creighton

Eric Chaney of Kansas City, Kan., graduated from the School of Pharmacy and Health Professions with a Doctor of Pharmacy during Creighton University’s Commencement ceremonies on May 14 at CenturyLink Omaha in Nebraska.

More than 1,700 degrees were conferred during the morning and afternoon ceremonies.

Creighton University, a Jesuit and Catholic university in Omaha, Neb., enrolls 4,000 undergraduates and 4,100 graduate and professional students among nine schools and colleges.

Budget cuts lead to waiting list for senior services

by Andy Marso, KHI News Service

Eleven agencies that provide support to help Kansas seniors stay in their homes are starting to put some on waiting lists following state budget cuts.

The $2.1 million reduction to the state’s Senior Care Act programs was part of a package of cuts Gov. Sam Brownback made last month after the Legislature sent him a budget that didn’t balance.

Brownback and the Legislature have faced several budget crises since enacting large income tax cuts in 2012.

The Senior Care Act cuts will affect in-home services that are provided to Kansans 60 and older who aren’t poor enough to qualify for them under the Medicaid frail/elderly waiver.

Jocelyn Lyons, executive director of the Jayhawk Area Agency on Aging (AAA) in Topeka, said in a news release that the decrease in funding “came as a complete shock” and represents about 30 percent of the program’s budget.

“The cut to the Senior Care Act program challenges our agency in determining how our consumers will continue to receive services and avoid early nursing home placement,” Lyons said.

Lyons and her colleagues estimate that about 1,300 of the 4,500 Kansans currently served by Senior Care Act programs will be affected.

The Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services administers the program with the help of Area Agencies on Aging throughout the state that were created by the federal Older Americans Act in 1973 to help older adults “age in place” rather than move into nursing homes.

To do that, the program provides attendant care, respite for family caregivers, housekeeping and chore services, and adult day care.

Monica Anderson, a case worker with the Johnson County AAA, said the agency has started to wait-list some Kansas seniors applying for housekeeping and attendant care services.

“We’re trying to serve as many people as we can,” Anderson said, “and we’re doing that by looking at their long-term care threshold scores when we go out and assess them. Depending on their level of need, we’re kind of allocating hours — a few here, a few there.”

Anderson said, for instance, that a senior eligible for six hours a week of attendant care might get two right away and be put on a waiting list for the other four.

Anderson recently visited a 96-year-old client named Julia in her subsidized apartment in Overland Park.

Julia, who asked that her last name not be published, receives attendant care to help her climb in and out of her bathtub because she has a bad knee. She also receives housekeeping services to keep her apartment tidy.

The services are wonderful, she said, and living independently is good for both her and the state.

“They always tell you the reason they do allow people to come here is it costs so much less than if they go to a nursing home, which, who wants to go to?” Julia said.

Anderson said Julia’s services cost about $500 a month, while a nursing home in Johnson County could cost 10 times more.

Julia says she moved to the Kansas City area from London 70 years ago after marrying an American who was a reporter for Stars and Stripes covering World War II.

She survived the Blitz on London as a young woman, an experience she said may have contributed to the personality that drives her to continue wanting to live independently, without asking for daily help from her family.

“I don’t want to be a problem to anyone,” Julia said.

Anderson has worked for the Johnson County AAA for 22 years. She said the budget cuts have taken a personal toll as she tells Kansans like Julia they will be placed on waiting lists for some of their services.

“When I have to go out and meet people in desperate need and say, ‘I’m sorry, we can’t accommodate all of your needs,’ it’s very difficult,” Anderson said.

The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.

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